On the go and no time to finish that story right now? Your News is the place for you to save content to read later from any device. Register with us and content you save will appear here so you can access them to read later.

Kiwi cyclist George Bennett has moved up the general classification after a busy finish to stage four of the Giro d'Italia.

Bennett crossed the line in 14th on the stage, 10 seconds behind the winner - a finish which saw him beat several other favourites, despite not closing his deficit on overall leader Rohan Dennis.

The stage was won by Tim Wellens, who edged Michael Woods and Bennett's teammate, Enrico Battaglin, on the short and steep uphill finish.

Indeed, it was Battaglin who caused the most drama from a New Zealand perspective, with the commentators confusing the Italian rider for Bennett, leaving some fans under the impression that Bennett was in sight of a famous stage win.

It was not to be however, with the Kiwi climber coming in as the lead rider of the third group - six seconds behind general classification contenders such as Thibaut Pinot and Tom Dumoulin, but ahead of Chris Froome and Miguel Angel Lopez, who both lost 21 seconds.

As a result, Bennett moves up 11 spots into 21st overall, one second behind Froome, and 56 seconds behind Dennis, who stayed in the lead by one second over Dumoulin.

Dennis and Dumoulin both finished in the second group on the undulating 202 kilometre course, which didn't deliver until the final throes, with the race stage sparking to life on the modest penultimate climb with 10 kilometres to go.

Two attacks were launched, before a crash with 6.5 kilometres to go on a pinch point left a bunch of riders stalled behind the leading group. Another crash with three kilometres left created a nervy finish, and a foursome managed to sneak a march on the peloton just before the final run-in to the line.

Wellens was part of that group, and with assistance from a teammate, he was the freshest when the other favourites tried to grind past him.

Bennett battled home 10 seconds later, and a similar stage is on the cards tomorrow, albeit with an easier finish, with the same faces likely to be involved at the end

Niall Anderson is covering every stage of the Giro d'Italia live for the Herald. He would prefer that the Giro stop taking an eternity to post the official results.